Buikomvang veel belangrijker dan BMI voor ontstaan diabetes (2).*
Uit een studie onder 27.000 mannen over een periode van 13 jaar blijkt dat de kans op het ontstaan van diabetes type twee tot wel 12 keer groter is bij een buikomvang van 102 cm of meer dan bij een buikomvang van 87 cm. Deze uitkomsten staan los van de gemeten BMI (body mass index).
Widening
Waistlines Predict Diabetes in Men
Belt
size beats body mass index as disease indicator, study finds
(HealthDay
News) -- A new study supplies more proof those "love handles" and
"spare tires" need to go: Researchers say a man's waist size beats his
body
mass index
in predicting whether he'll develop type 2 diabetes.
"Abdominal fat
measured by waist circumference can indicate a strong risk for diabetes, whether
or not a man is considered overweight or obese according to his body mass index
[BMI]," study author Dr. Youfa Wang, an assistant professor at Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said in a prepared statement.
Reporting
in the March issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Wang's
team analyzed data collected from more than 27,000 men tracked for more than 13
years as part of the Harvard Health Professionals Follow-Up Study.
They
found that men with larger waists or higher BMI were both at greater risk for type
2 diabetes
than slimmer men.
Compared
to men with the smallest waists (29 to 34 inches), those with waists of 34.3 to
35.9 inches, 36 to 37.8 inches, 37.9 to 39.8 inches, and 40 to 62 inches were
two, three, five and 12 times more likely, respectively, to develop diabetes.
Based
on these findings, the currently recommended waistline of 40 inches or below for
men may need to be lowered, the study authors suggested.
"Many
of the men who developed type 2 diabetes had measurements lower than the
cutoff," Wang pointed out.(April 2005)